Thank you for sharing this. I would add the additional option of using a deionized water extinguisher with a spray head vs. a stream. My understanding is that this is a very effective extinguisher, even for electrical fires, since deionized water does not conduct electricity. It is considered a "clean" extinguisher vs. the power/chemical extinguisher which can create a real mess to clean up. Some large organizations, with very expensive computerized equipment, have replaced all of the powder extinguishers with deionized water extinguishers for this reason.

The water mist can also be used in pool mechanical rooms, medical operating rooms and on operating electrical equipment. There is no temperature shock as with CO2, no electrical shock, no damage to equipment as with ABC, and less expensive than Halon, Halotron and other clean agents.

Great little powerpoint on fire safety, fire extinguishers for the public or office training.

Also a quick little drill for refresher of firefighters on basic of fire safety and fire extinguisher use. (Inc'd. fire types, use of fire extinguishers and last point of you between the doorway of exit and the fire)

This is a good presentation, but as a recommendation, please add a comment to the section on Using a Fire Extinguisher. It states on one slide to aim at the base of the fire... but the illustration shows the responder right ontop of the flames. Discharging a fire bottle at the base of the flames at this close range (less than 4 feet) may scatter the embers/ashes and potentially cause a seondary fire.